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The bishop's man : a novel

MacIntyre, Linden. (Author).

Father Duncan MacAskill has spent most of his priesthood as the man employed by his bishop to tidy away potential scandal. While sent by his bishop to a country parish to avoid a big media scandal, Duncan must confront his consequences of past cover-ups and the suppression of his own human needs.

Kit  - 2009
FIC Macin
10 copies / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 0307357066
  • ISBN: 9780307357069
  • ISBN: 9780307357076
  • Physical Description 399 pages
  • Publisher Toronto : Random House Canada, [2009]

Content descriptions

General Note:
NFPL book club kit.
2009 Giller Prize winner.
This kit has 10 copies.
Canada Reads Top 40 Essential Canadian Novels of the Decade.
GMD: kit.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 32.00
Awards Note:
Scotiabank Giller Prize, 2009.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 0307357066
The Bishop's Man
The Bishop's Man
by MacIntyre, Linden
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Excerpt

The Bishop's Man

{{ 1 }} The night before things started to become unstuck, I actually spent a good hour taking stock of my general situation and concluded that, all things considered, I was in pretty good shape. I was approaching the age of fifty, a psychological threshold only slightly less daunting than death, and found myself not much changed from forty or even thirty. If anything, I was healthier. The last decade of the century, and of the millennium, was shaping up to be less stressful than the eighth -- which had been defined by certain events in Central America -- and the ninth, burdened as it was by scandals here at home. I was a priest in a time that is not especially convivial toward the clergy. I had, nevertheless, achieved what I believed to be a sustainable spirituality and an ability to elaborate upon it with minimal cant and hypocrisy. I had even, and this is no small achievement, come to terms with a certain sordid obscurity about my family origins in a place where people celebrate the most tedious details of their personal ancestry. I am the son of a bastard father. My mother was a foreigner, felled long before her time by disappointment and tuberculosis. I was, in the most literal sense, a child of war. I've calculated that my conception occurred just days before my father's unit embarked from England for the hostile shores of Italy, on October 23, 1943. There is among his papers a cryptic reference to a summary trial and fine (five days' pay) for being AWOL on the night of October 17. I was born in London, England, July 15, 1944. Isolation? I had, though perhaps imperfectly, mastered celibacy, the institutional denial of the most human of transactions. I was and am, to a degree, excluded from my peer group, my brothers in the priesthood, for complex reasons that will soon become apparent. But at the time I thought that I'd discovered an important universal truth: that isolation, willingly embraced, becomes the gift of solitude; that discipline ennobles flesh. In that evanescent moment of tranquility, I was feeling okay. I see it as another life, the man I was, a stranger now. I'd spent the weekend in Cape Breton, in the parish of Port Hood, filling in for Mullins, who had gone away with his charismatics or for golf. Escape of some kind. Mullins likes to pace himself. I'd planned to extend my visit by a day, to spend that Monday reading, meditating. The village of Port Hood is a pretty place and restful. I grew up in the area, but my personal connections there were limited. I could pretend to be a stranger, a pose I find congenial. Mullins and the good Sisters up the road had given the glebe a comfortable tidiness. Anyone could feel at home there, as in a well-maintained motel. It has a remarkable view of the gulf and a small fishing harbour, just along the coast, called Murphy's Pond. It was a pleasant change from the incessant noise and movement at the university an hour or so away, where, normally, my job was dean of students. In truth it was, as my late father used to say in a rare ironic moment, not so much a job as a position. Others did most of the real work. I was, in fact, in a kind of pastoral limbo, recovering, ostensibly, from several years of hard, unsavoury employment. The phone aroused me on that Monday morning in Port Hood and launched the narrative that I must now, with some reluctance, share. "The bishop needs to see you." "What does he want now?" I asked. "He didn't say. He said to come this evening. To the palace." I know now that I was stalling when I drove to Little Harbour, which is another, smaller fishing port just off a secondary road on the southern edge of the parish. The harbour seemed to be deserted. Among the vivid particulars of that October morning in 1993 I remember a blue heron, knee-deep, trans Excerpted from The Bishop's Man by Linden MacIntyre All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.